What did Jesus really say?

1.2.8 Summary: What is a
"Trinity"?

In the above historical analysis,
we learned that in 325C.E., the Trinitarian church set forth
the doctrine of homoousious meaning: of "CO-EQUALITY,
CO-ETERNITY, AND CONSUBSTANTIALITY" of the second person of
the trinity with the Father. The doctrine became known as
the Creed of Nicea. But they also went on to develop the
doctrine of "blind faith." This is because those who
developed the "Trinity" doctrine were unable to define it in
any manner that could not be refuted by the unwavering
Unitarians Christians through the Bible. In the beginning
they tried to defend the "Trinity" through logic and the
Bible. This continued for a long time until the Trinitarian
church finally gave up on ever substantiating their claims
through the Bible. So they demanded blind faith in their
doctrines. Anyone who did not believe blindly and dared to
question them would be branded a heretic and tortured or
killed. The following is only a small sampling of the verses
of the Bible which refute this definition:

Co-equality:

Jesus and God can not be co-equal because the Bible
says:

"... my Father is greater than I"

John 14:28

Obviously if God is greater than Jesus (pbuh) then they
can not be equal. We also read:

"But of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not
the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son, but the
Father."

Mark 13:32

If Jesus and God were equal then it follows that they
will be equal in knowledge. But as we can see, God is
greater in knowledge than Jesus (pbuh).

Co-eternity:

God is claimed to have "begotten" Jesus (pbuh). Jesus
(pbuh) is claimed to be the "Son" of God. "Beget" is a verb
which implies an action. No matter how you define what God
actually did in order to "beget" Jesus (pbuh), any
definition must require that God Almighty performed some
action and then Jesus (pbuh) came into being. Before God
performed this action Jesus was not. After God performed
this action Jesus came into being. Thus, not only is Jesus
(pbuh) not eternal, since there was a time (before the
"begetting") when he did not exist, but he can also never be
co-eternal with God since God was in existence at a time
when Jesus was not. This is very simple grade-school
logic.

Consubstantiality:

First go back and read the comments on co-equality and
co-eternity. Next, remember when Jesus is claimed to have
died? (Mark 15:37, John 19:30). If God and Jesus are one
substance then God died also. But then who was governing all
of creation? Remember:

"And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, he said,
Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit: and having said
thus, he gave up the ghost."

Luke 23:46

If Jesus and God were "one substance" then Jesus (pbuh)
would not need to send his spirit to God because it is
already God's own spirit, who is also Jesus. Remember

"And he went a little farther, and fell on his face,
and prayed, saying, O my Father, if it be possible, let this
cup pass from me: nevertheless not as I will but as thou
wilt"

Matthew 26:39

And "I can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I
judge: and my judgment is just; because I seek not mine own
will, but the will of the Father which hath sent
me."

John 5:30

If Jesus and God were one substance then this ONE
substance must only have ONE will.

If Jesus and God are one substance then how can ONE
substance forsake itself? Why would ONE substance need to
pray to itself?

Tom Harpur says:

"The idea of the Second Person of a Holy Trinity
knowing what it is to be God-forsaken has only to be stated
to be recognized as absurd"

For Christ's Sake, pp. 45.

Even explaining the supposed "Trinity" away as a
"mystery" does not hold water. In 1 Corinthians 14:33 we
read "For God is not [the author] of
confusion." Thus, confusion can never be His very
nature.

THIS is why blind faith was demanded, and
THIS is why twelve million Christians
were put to death by the church as heretics in the notorious
Church "Inquisitions" (Apology for Muhammad and the
Qur'an, John Davenport).